Saturday, January 31, 2026
ADVT 
National

Body Of Missing Calgary Youngster Recovered In Yoho National Park

The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2016 01:28 PM
  • Body Of Missing Calgary Youngster Recovered In Yoho National Park
FIELD, B.C. — Rescuers in Yoho National Park are releasing more details about the search for a young Calgary boy swept to his death in the Yoho River in southeastern British Columbia.
 
Parks Canada spokesman Lisa Paulson says the 11-year-old and his nine-year-old brother were jumping on rocks at the edge of the fast-moving river on Friday evening when both youngsters tumbled into the water.
 
She says a 14-year-old relative was able to grab the younger child, but the older boy was swept away by the powerful current.
 
Paulson says frantic family members were able to track the child for a short distance, while quick-thinking bystanders formed a watch on bridges and embankments downstream in hopes of spotting him, but he was not seen again.
 
Paulson was the incident commander during the search that continued until Tuesday morning, when the boy's body was found 13 kilometres downstream at the junction of the Yoho and Kicking Horse rivers.
 
She says the family has travelled to Golden to identify the body and the coroners' service is now handling the case.
 
 
There have been past incidents involving kayakers along the same stretch of river, known for its extreme rapids, but Paulson believes this is the first death of a visitor in the area near Takkakaw Falls, northeast of Field, B.C.
 
"It was a tremendous, heroic effort," Paulson says of the teenager's efforts to rescue the 11-year-old in the moments after he fell.
 
She also applauds the efforts of the bystanders who tried to track the boy downstream.
 
"There was some very quick thinking and good judgement on behalf of visitors who did that initial search effort."
 
Paulson has spoken to the boy's parents and says they have an extended family and tremendous support from the community.
 
While there was great disappointment the boy wasn't found alive, she was relieved that the body was found quickly. 
 
 
"It can take weeks or sometimes months ... but finding him now provides the searchers with some relief in knowing we can help provide the family with some closure."

MORE National ARTICLES

Nuisance Noise Prompts Growing Complaints Across Vancouver

Nuisance Noise Prompts Growing Complaints Across Vancouver
Data from Vancouver's 311 call service reveals 2,148 noise complaints were received in 2015, almost double those received just four years earlier.

Nuisance Noise Prompts Growing Complaints Across Vancouver

LNG Canada Delays Final Decision On Kitimat Project, No New Timeline Set

LNG Canada Delays Final Decision On Kitimat Project, No New Timeline Set
VANCOUVER — Instability in global energy markets has caused international partners in a proposed liquefied natural gas project in Kitimat, B.C., to delay their final decision on the venture.

LNG Canada Delays Final Decision On Kitimat Project, No New Timeline Set

Pack Of Killer Whales Surround, Jostle Family's Boat Off Newfoundland

Pack Of Killer Whales Surround, Jostle Family's Boat Off Newfoundland
BURGEO, N.L. — A father-daughter fishing trip turned dangerous when the family's boat was encircled by a pack of killer whales off Newfoundland.

Pack Of Killer Whales Surround, Jostle Family's Boat Off Newfoundland

Muslim Girls Making Change Spread Messages Through Poetry

Muslim Girls Making Change Spread Messages Through Poetry
SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. — Four girls from Vermont are using their voices and powerful performance poetry to get their message out about being Muslim in America, stereotypes, and other issues near to them.

Muslim Girls Making Change Spread Messages Through Poetry

Manitoba Mounties Rescue Starving Skunk With Head Stuck In Tim Hortons Cup

Manitoba Mounties Rescue Starving Skunk With Head Stuck In Tim Hortons Cup
The RCMP posted a video on its Twitter feed showing two Mounties helping the critter on June 22 near Winnipegosis, about 300 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg.

Manitoba Mounties Rescue Starving Skunk With Head Stuck In Tim Hortons Cup

Deaf Dog Once Thought To Be Untrainable Wins Champion Agility Title

Deaf Dog Once Thought To Be Untrainable Wins Champion Agility Title
HALIFAX — She was born deaf, and surrendered to the Nova Scotia SPCA as "untrainable."

Deaf Dog Once Thought To Be Untrainable Wins Champion Agility Title